The beauty of digital colorization is that it's a *copy*. The original B&W film still exists unchanged.

I don't have a preference either way, but I do wonder how they determined their color palette?.

On 11/7/2019 21:57:22, ann sanfedele wrote:
Yeah, I agree Ralf  - it seems too fast mostly.  I'd have preferred they had not colorized it.. even though it is done minimally.

ann

On 11/6/2019 10:11 AM, Ralf R Radermacher wrote:
Am 06.11.19 um 15:34 schrieb Daniel J. Matyola:
https://digg.com/video/heres-rare-footage-of-paris-from-the-year-1900-colorized?

Really amazing. It does help a lot if those old movies are played at the
correct speed, as well. Although I still have the impression it's a tad
fast.

Thanks for sharing.

Ralf

--
Ralf R. Radermacher  -  Köln/Cologne, Germany
Blog  : http://the-real-fotoralf.blogspot.com
Audio : http://aporee.org/maps/projects/fotoralf
Web   : http://www.fotoralf.de




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Science - Questions we may never find answers for.
Religion - Answers we must never question.

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